The Northern Advocate

Award for new child inhaler

Student’s inhaler design wins national award

- Julia Czerwonati­s

Anew inhaler for kids created by a Waipu¯ student could make life easier for children with asthma, after the design won a national award.

Hae Hae, a child-friendly inhaler designed by Maisie Panoho, won this year’s James Dyson Award, taking it to the internatio­nal competitio­n.

As part of her industrial design studies

I’ve lived with family members and I have friends that suffer from asthma for as long as I can remember. Maisie Panoho

at Massey University in Wellington, Panoho took a closer look at convention­al inhalers and trialled ideas before settling on her unique design.

“I developed the inhaler to be ergonomica­lly better for children’s hands. That was based on my project research,” Panoho said.

She looked at how children’s toys were designed and discovered they are often round and have a “bobble look”, as Panoho described it.

“That is why I decided to keep the bottom round.”

Also, the material she used, silicon, is meant to provide a better grip for kids. The so-called trigger wings on either side of the bottom bulb make it easier to trigger the device compared with a commonly used inhaler.

The device will also display informatio­n such as the battery life, how much medicine is available, when and how long to shake the inhaler, and a reward system for taking medicine.

Panoho started off her design developmen­t with a cardboard-and-polystyren­e model and eventually digitalise­d it with CAD (computer-aided design), which allowed further alteration­s.

“A big thanks to my partner who has allowed me to turn our table into my modelling station.”

The finalised design has been 3D-printed.

“I’ve lived with family members and I have friends that suffer from asthma for as long as I can remember,” Panoho said.

“From watching them and listening to them complain about certain aspects of it, I knew by my second year [at university] that I want to do this for my final-year project.

“It was my project research that made me focus on children. It was based on the statistics around children with asthma here in New Zealand.”

One in seven children takes asthma medication. Forty-seven per cent of hospital admissions from asthma are children, with more than 586,000 school days missed every year.

“This device has a game-changing design that could save lives,” said Sir Ray Avery, from the James Dyson Award judges panel.

“New Zealand has the highest rate of asthma in the developed world, and this could really help children be more engaged with taking their medicine.

“Maisie has thought about this issue, realised there was nothing on the market and designed a clever solution that has been executed well.

“It’s a clinical problem that has a worldwide applicatio­n and could easily be produced and rolled out globally to benefit children everywhere.”

Panoho won $3900 for her design and will move on to the internatio­nal stage along with two runners-up from New Zealand.

The top 20 will be announced on October 13 and the internatio­nal winners named on November 17.

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 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? Panoho worked closely with a Wellington family to refine her inhaler design.
Photo / Supplied Panoho worked closely with a Wellington family to refine her inhaler design.
 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? Maisie Panoho from Waipu¯ won this year's James Dyson Award with her inhaler Hae Hae.
Photo / Supplied Maisie Panoho from Waipu¯ won this year's James Dyson Award with her inhaler Hae Hae.

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